The Natural Georgia Series: Barrier Islands

Island Life and Culture: Tracing Georgia's Roots

By Beth A. Blaney

Color photos by Richard T. Bryant

Georgia's string of subtropical barrier islands boast a rich and lengthy cultural
history. Relics of ancient coastal Indians reveal that thousands of years passed
between the first generation of children born to aboriginal residents and the
winds that blew the large cloth sails propelling European ships. During the
sixteenth century, Spanish and French explorers first set foot upon the sandy
shores of the islands. Both countries laid claim to the lush coastal lands,
but the Spaniards proved strongest. Although many Georgia history books spend
little more than a few sentences on Spanish heritage in the pre-Oglethorpe period,
missions of considerable size and permanence thrived well into the seventeenth
century and reflect extensive Spanish activity.

With the eighteenth century came the English and the beginning of the most
influential era in the state's history as studied by Georgia schoolchildren.
Fertile acres were cultivated extensively and English colonists prospered from
the export of indigo, rice, hemp, and flax among other agricultural products.
Finally the stars and stripes replaced the union jack, but with the outbreak
of the Civil War, even the stars and bars of the Confederacy managed a short
reign. After the plantation era and its peak of Sea Island cotton production,
tycoons flocked to the barrier islands during the latter part of the nineteenth
century and into the twentieth. Today, picturesque ruins still stand-remnants
of missions, forts, slave dwellings, and mansions. Colossal live oaks, their
moss-draped branches ever extended, welcome conservationists to certain areas
along the coastal terrain and vacationers to others.

Natives Of The Barrier Islands

The Creeks, one of the so-called Five Civilized Nations of Indians, inhabited
Georgia's barrier islands long before Europeans set sail for the New World.
A nomadic people, they moved from one village to another with the changing seasons,
following migratory wild fowl, fishing the inland streams, and hunting alligators
in the coastal rivers and buffalo and deer on the mainland. They cultivated
corn, melons, squash, beans, tobacco, and fruit, and possessed insatiable appetites
for oysters.

It has been said that these native inhabitants were not mound builders like
so many other Indian tribes, but on Ossabaw Island-located 20 miles below Savannah-shell
mounds exist. Excavations have revealed mostly kitchen middens or massive piles
of oyster shells: evidence that Ossabaw was once a favorite Creek hunting, fishing,
and feasting ground. One of the largest Creek villages, with headquarters for
the chieftain of the tribe, was situated south of Ossabaw on St. Catherines
Island; a high promontory on this island's eastern side overlooks both beach
and sea and no doubt provided a natural vantage point for the Creeks.

On Sapelo Island, a 12-foot shell wall encloses a space at least 60 yards in
diameter-nearly the size of a football field. This ancient shell ring, or arena,
dates back some 5,800 years and is one of the oldest remnants of Indian activity
along the Georgia coast. As legend has it, the arena was formed by a Creek chieftain
who tossed aside shells, day after day, as he sat on the ground cross-legged
and feasted on oysters delivered to him by runners who fetched them directly
from the ocean. Sea Island, St. Simons, and Jekyll share similar prehistoric
backgrounds of Creek inhabitation. Only Cumberland Island was occupied by the
Timucuans, a Florida tribe whose customs and language differed from those of
the upper island Creeks.

Among the first traders said to have traveled to the coast were tribes from
north Georgia who followed the Old Indian Path from the Appalachians to the
Atlantic. With weapons, tools, and arrowheads of stone and flint they arrived,
wishing to trade for dried fish, fowl, fruits, and herbs. Of particular interest
were the dried leaves of the cassina, which grows in abundance along the coast
and was used to brew a potent ceremonial tea. Arrowheads, made from stone that
is not native to the Georgia coast, comprise portions of contemporary public
and private collections.

Early Explorers And The Hidden History Of The Georgia Coast

Beyond domestic trade, the coastal Indians established foreign trade relations
during the sixteenth century. According to Burnette Vanstory, author of Georgia's
Land of the Golden Isles, they supplied French ships with "cargoes
of sassafras, animal skins, wax, rosin, and wild turkeys. It has been said that
people in France were enjoying turkey from the Southern coast long before the
first Thanksgiving feast of the pilgrims."

During the 1560s, early explorers like Frenchman Jean Ribaut with his band
of Huguenots and Pedro Menéndez and his Spanish fleet staked their claims
to these islands. But certain evidence suggests an even earlier European settlement
along Georgia's barrier islands. Dr. Paul Hoffman, professor of history at Louisiana
State University, suspects that 60 years before the demise of Sir Walter Raleigh's
"lost colony" at Roanoke, the Spanish tried and failed to gain a foothold
in the New World. It was along Georgia's barrier islands, not at Roanoke or
Jamestown or Plymouth Rock, according to Hoffman, that America's colonial history
truly began.

The year was 1526. Lucas Vasquez de Ayllon, a royal judge residing in Santo
Domingo, led a voyage of 500 men and women, including African slaves and Dominican
friars, to establish a Spanish colony called San Miguel de Gualdape. Attempts
to settle, however, were short lived. Indians soon attacked and disease quickly
spread; Ayllon and more than 200 other settlers died. Less than three months
after its founding, the Spanish colony was abandoned.

The site of San Miguel de Gualdape has yet to be uncovered while attempts to
pinpoint its location have been plagued by controversy. Using sketchy and often
conflicting records, many historians have concluded that the colony was near
Georgetown or Port Royal, South Carolina, or even near the mouth of the Savannah
River. But within the last 15 years, reprinted accounts of early Spanish voyages
in the New World (originally published in the 1530s) "strongly suggest
that Gualdape was on Sapelo Sound," says Hoffman. Despite squabbles over
location, there appears to be no doubt about the year of settlement, 1526: 39
years before the founding of St. Augustine, 81 years before Jamestown, 95 years
before the arrival of the Mayflower, and 207 years before Oglethorpe sailed
up the Savannah River to colonize Georgia. Confirmation of Ayllon's settlement-the
first European establishment in North America-would surely require a revision
of history.

Dr. David Thomas Hurst, an anthropologist employed by the American Museum of
Natural History in New York City, is working to foster greater interest in Georgia's
Spanish epoch. The author of St. Catherines: An Island in Time, Thomas's
research has shown that the Spanish mission system in Georgia (and Florida)
"was founded earlier.involved more people and lasted longer" than
its better-known counterparts such as the Alamo and others in the American West.
"Understanding of the past has always been heavily conditioned by attitudes
of the present," explains Thomas. "The early missions of Texas, Arizona,
New Mexico, and California still remain highly visible. It is no coincidence
that hundreds of volumes have been written on America's western missions."

Once the French under Ribaut were driven off of the barrier islands by Menéndez
and his Spanish fleet, Santa Catalina de Guale was established on St. Catherines
Island in 1566. It is considered part of the first settlement north of Mexico
deemed for regular Spanish mission work. When Thomas began searching for Santa
Catalina on St. Catherines, he knew that for nearly 100 years the mission was
the "northernmost Spanish outpost on the Eastern Seaboard, and this historical
fact implied considerable size and permanence." As anticipated, he and
a team of archaeologists uncovered evidence of a fortified church, buildings
to house soldiers and priests with granaries, storehouses, and dwellings suitable
for hundreds of Guale (another name for the Creeks pronounced "wallie")
Indians.

Mission priest learned the Indians' language and converted thousands to Christianity
between 1566 and 1680. In addition to teaching and converting natives, the priests
spent time tending their gardens-a profusion of tropical vegetables, fruits,
and flowers. A legacy to the Georgia coast from its early white inhabitants,
groves of oranges, lemons, pomegranates, olives, and figs would continue to
bear fruit long after Spanish occupation.

Although the majority of natives were friendly toward missionaries, some resented
the outsiders. Buckling under the harassment of hostile Creeks, several missions
were destroyed and Jesuit friars eventually driven out. In the 1570s, mission
work was zealously reorganized by Franciscans and pursued for decades, but troubles
for priests persisted. With English colonists in close proximity to the barrier
islands, English traders provoked friction between Indians and Spaniards and
goaded pirates sailing the coastal waters to come ashore and plunder missions.
But Santa Catalina de Guale persisted, and in the early 1600s, Juan de Las Cabeza
de Altamirano, the Roman Catholic bishop stationed in Havana, Cuba, came to
the Georgia coast to praise the work of missionaries and baptize Guale leaders.

English Colonization

In 1732, King George II issued a charter for James Oglethorpe and 19 associates
to colonize Georgia. The territory to be settled lay between the Savannah and
Altamaha rivers; England and Spain had agreed to leave the region below the
Altamaha as a sort of no man's land. So it was left to Oglethorpe, British general
and philanthropist, to secure the path towards development of this 13th colony.
Oglethorpe developed a three-fold plan. It included establishing a defense against
the Spaniards in Florida; creating a haven for Protestant dissenters, insolvent
debtors, and the criminal classes of England; as well as developing a new source
of revenue for the Crown.

In 1733, General Oglethorpe first touched American soil on Tybee Island, approximately
18 miles from the site where he would found Savannah. Upon his arrival, Oglethorpe
and the Creek Indian Chief Tomochichi became fast friends. The general's dealings
with the natives were, from the start, remarkably successful. Tomochichi soon
persuaded the Creeks to peaceably turn over possession of the chartered territory,
and the town of Savannah was founded later that year. Settling upriver was as
strategic a move as Oglethorpe's plans for mass fortification along the coast.
Oglethorpe selected the island of St. Simons for fortification against Spanish
invasion. He ordered construction of a fort on St. Simons's west side where
a bend in the river formed a natural vantage point. Built in 1736, this British
fort, one of the largest in colonial America, provided protection for other
colonies as well as the town within its walls. Fort, town, and river were called
Frederica in honor of Frederick, Prince of Wales. The town rapidly grew around
the fort as Oglethorpe encouraged craftsmen, artisans, shopkeepers, and their
families to settle there. But after the British victory at the Battle of Bloody
Marsh, the regiment disbanded, and many settlers left for other parts of the
colony. In 1758 a fire destroyed the town and it was never rebuilt.

Numerous other forts, both colonial and American, were constructed over the
next 150 or so years. Savannah's strategic wartime importance contributed to
the construction of two fortifications near the city. In 1808, a brick structure
surrounded by tidal moat, Fort Jackson was built on Salter's Island near Tybee.
The second, Fort Pulaski, was built in 1829.

In keeping with the land agreement between Oglethorpe and Tomochichi, the Creeks
retained Ossabaw Island along with neighboring St. Catherines and Sapelo
for their hunting grounds, but with British influence the names of the other
islands became Anglicized. Previously San Pedro, Cumberland Island was given
its English name soon after the colony of Georgia was settled. In 1734 when
Tomochichi and his family visited England, the chief's nephew, Toonahowie, kindled
a friendship with William Augustus, Duke of Cumberland, the 13-year-old son
of the king. As the Indian family's four-month visit came to an end, Prince
William presented Toonahowie with a gold watch. Deeply touched by the gesture
and the relationship the two had shared, the Indian prince requested the name
of San Pedro be changed in honor of William Augustus.

Perhaps the most intriguing instances of nomenclatural evolution were those
experienced by Jekyll Island. Jekyll was a favorite haunt of the Creeks who
called it Aspo. In the 1560s, the French Huguenots named the island Ile de
la Somme. Over 150 years later, General Oglethorpe changed its name once
again-this time to honor Sir Joseph Jekyll, a gentleman who had helped him finance
the colony of Georgia, but Jekyll locals have long since contested such aristocratic
ties to the island's most recent name. As word-of-mouth history goes, a Frenchman
named Jacques operated a trading station for pirates and buccaneers here in
the 1600s. The name Jacques' Island deteriorated into Jake's Isle, then Jakyl.
Spelled Jekyl for many years, an extra "l" was eventually added making
Jekyll the accepted spelling.

Indigo, Live Oaking, And Sea Island Cotton

By the 1740s the Georgia colony had proved its worth as a buffer against Spanish
forces but had yet to establish itself as a source of income for the mother
country. Oglethorpe believed the cultivation of fertile acres along the coast
would surely reap profit. During these early stages of agricultural development,
planters were encouraged to grow indigo for the production of dyes, mulberry
trees to make silk, and vineyards for wine. Of the three, indigo thrived; in
a time before synthetic dyes, it rapidly became one of the colony's chief exports.
According to a record dating back to 1756, other agricultural products from
the coast included rice, pitch, tar, hemp, flax, vegetable wax, and beeswax.
Lumbering and cattle-raising also earned profits for the colony.

Prosperous planters made their way to the lush barrier islands and shared in
the success for more than a decade. But soon the thunderous boom of Revolutionary
War cannons forced island inhabitants to flee. Fields were later plowed and
replanted, but with the War of 1812 the coast was again subjected to enemy raids;
Fort Jackson, off of Tybee, was among the coastal forts garrisoned.

Between the Revolutionary War and the War of 1812, a process called "live
oaking" became a booming business. Before the advent of metal-hulled ships,
live oak was one of the world's most sought after lumber types for the construction
of battleships. A dense, heavy wood with many curves and a twisted grain, live
oak is resistant to rotting and weathering. Such qualities made live oak ships
superior war vessels. Reports of British cannonballs bouncing off the hull of
the U.S.S. Constitution, a live oak ship employed during the War of 1812,
gave it the name Old Ironsides. As such reports spread worldwide, a demand
for live oak in both domestic and foreign markets skyrocketed. Unfortunately,
400 to 700 live oaks were required to build the frame of just one ship, and
Georgia's barrier island forests were ravaged. Procuring live oak became increasingly
difficult. This problem coupled with the inception of "ironclad" steam-powered
ships diminished the live oak trade by the mid-1800s.

The barrier islands now flourished in what author Burnette Vanstory described
as "the high noon of the plantation era." White land, black labor.

Ossabaw Island was among the first of Georgia's coastal empires. The cultivation
and processing of indigo prompted the transfer of hundreds of slaves to the
island. Field hands were used to cut the plants at daybreak before the hot sun
could dry the leaves. Vat workers then immersed the leaves to draw out the dye
while others stirred the extract with paddles for aeration. Skilled men handled
the dye's actual preparation, boiling its sediment with water then draining
and pressing it into molds. Once dried in the sun, the molds of indigo were
loaded upon barges headed for Savannah to then be shipped to foreign markets.
Ossabaw bustled with its plantation house and slaves' quarters, its field hands
and dye workers, and its docks and loading crews.

Late in the eighteenth century, colonists determined that the subtropical barrier
islands were decidedly ripe for the cultivation of a certain species of cotton.
Colonists who sought refuge in the West Indies during the American Revolution
found it there. Seed plants brought to the Georgia coast were said to be developed
into the most superior brand of cotton ever grown. The long-fibered cotton could
be easily separated from the seed.

During the late 1700s and early 1800s, coastal plantations made agricultural
history. From Sapelo and St. Simons on down to Cumberland, island fields were
white with cotton. Even Ossabaw turned over its profitable indigo fields to
the growth of Sea Island cotton upon learning it demanded up to twice the fee
for ordinary cotton in markets throughout the world. Crops of Sea Island cotton
brought many plantation owners up to $100,000 per year.

Planters built sprawling estates, entertained lavishly, and coveted the finer
things. Life on the island empires, however, was best categorized with contradiction-elegant
yet primitive. Indeed there were all the luxuries and delicacies of the Old
World as enjoyed by the duBignons-a noble family who came to American to escape
the French Revolution in 1789-on their 11,000-acre Jekyll domain planted in
cotton. The duBignons lived like the French landowners from whom they descended.
The family residence was decorated with furnishings, paintings, and ornaments
from France, brought by their sailing vessel the Commodore on her annual
voyage to the motherland for supplies. But such seclusion from the outside world
could prove dangerously inconvenient. Sudden illness had to be treated with
home remedies. Communication was dependent upon boat travel and if turbulent
weather made waters impassable, island inhabitants were forced to rely on their
ingenuity.

Despite the prosperity reaped from the cultivation of cotton, certain agricultural
experts expressed concern. Thomas Spalding, an authority on Sea Island cotton,
foresaw the potential danger of exhausting energies on one crop to the exclusion
of others. A resident of Sapelo Island, he successfully introduced sugar cane
to the barrier islands as an alternative cash crop; with so much cotton being
produced at once, a surplus seemed imminent. One of the earliest advocates of
diversified farming, Spalding regularly made speeches and published articles
urging farmers to rotate their crops. His insight was a modern concept, one
touting the importance of conserving nutrients in the soil.

Just as Spalding predicted, cotton production peaked, and the demand and price
declined. Near the middle of the nineteenth century, England experienced a recession,
and the coastal island docks backed up with bales of cotton. Plantation soils
also became exhausted. Before long, rampant infestation of boll weevils destroyed
the crops.

The Lore And Lifestyles Of Plantation Slaves

Headman upon the Spalding plantation was a famous slave called Bulallah, believed
to have been born in the French Sudan. Bulallah enjoyed the complete confidence
and respect of his master and of all the men who came under his supervision.
Father of a score of children, Bulallah has hundreds of descendants living today
in the coastal region. Many are said to have inherited his copper-toned skin
and features as well as his height. His descendants are proud of their ancestry
and pass down tales of the old man. Bulallah was wise in the ways of nature.
His children and his children's children knew the secrets of the moon, the tides,
the waters, and the forests. When one family member fell sick, the elders related
to Bulallah knew which herbs and roots to gather and how to concoct the proper
medicinal brew. Joel Chandler Harris's Story of Aaron mentions a book
written in Arabic by Ben Ali (another name by which Bulallah is called). This
volume is prized among rare books at the Georgia State University Library located
in Atlanta.

The majority of slaves relegated to work upon the coastal empires did not enjoy
the confidence and respect of their masters. An Englishwoman by the name of
Frances (Fanny) Kemble recorded the day-to-day operations and conditions of
plantation life on St. Simons. After marrying a wealthy Philadelphian, Pierce
Bulter, whose family fortune was partly derived from a vast cotton and rice
plantation, Kemble lived on the island for several months. In her book, Journal
of a Residence on a Georgian Plantation in 1838-1839, Kimble expressed disdain
for "the manifest injustice of unpaid and enforced labor; the brutal inhumanity
of allowing a man to strip and lash a woman, the mother of 10 children; to exact
from her, toil, which was to maintain in luxury idle young men, the owners of
the plantation." Her account is one of backbreaking slave labor endured
in miserably high temperatures and unbearable humidity, and of the harsh cruelties
inflicted regularly upon slaves by their white masters. Kemble also details
the plantation's landscape of swamps and woods, canals and rivers, stately mansions
and decrepit hovels.

Today a square brick chimney is all that remains of a steam-powered rice mill
on the Butler plantation. A roadside marker near the site mentions Kemble's
Journal "which is said to have influenced England against the Confederacy."
Although it hardly affected international diplomacy, the book (which first appeared
in 1863 in England, then in the states) did cause controversy in the North and
South. In the South, Kemble was denounced as a meddling foreigner who stood
in judgment on matters with which she had merely a passing acquaintance. She
was also accused of distortion and exaggeration. But in the North, her accounts
furthered the cause of many abolitionists. Skeptics of Kemble's Journal
remain critical today. They cite several willful misrepresentations as evidence
of unreliability, and point to a book published after the war by Kemble's daughter,
Frances Leigh, that contradicted her mother's accounts.

The War Between The States

During the Civil War in the 1860s, most of the barrier islands were evacuated
at some stage before the Confederacy surrendered. Those residing on St. Catherines
and Ossabaw departed immediately. For a time in 1861, Confederate troops were
stationed upon Sapelo Island.

Numerous forts on the barrier islands earned mention in the history books thanks
to their roles in the Civil War. On January 3, 1861, in one of the first military
actions of the war, Georgia troops seized Fort Pulaski (located on Cockspur
Island near Tybee) from Federal hands. Only 15 months later, Union troops occupying
Tybee recaptured the fort. When construction of Fort Pulaski began in 1829,
one of its engineers-soon after his graduation from West Point-was Second Lieutenant
Robert E. Lee.

Fort Jackson, previously a colonial fort also located on a barrier island,
served as the Confederate headquarters of the river batteries during the Civil
War. An interior brick fort guarding Savannah's river approach, naval vessels
never overcame it.

Troops of the Confederacy were also stationed at the south end of St. Simons
with instructions to guard the entrance of the Brunswick harbor. But a few weeks
shy of New Year's Day 1862, Union gunboats blockaded the coast and the residents
of St. Simons were ordered off the island. Eventually Confederate troops were
evacuated from St. Simons Island-long ago a military stronghold where General
Oglethorpe strategically constructed Fort Frederica to stave enemy invaders
away from the colonies. Bitter yet weary soldiers followed their final orders
and blew up the St. Simons lighthouse to keep the light from aiding the victorious
blockaders. With St. Simons and Brunswick in the hands of Union forces, the
island was used as a concentration area for freed slaves from the mainland.

Some of the first black troops to see action in the Civil War had been stationed
on St. Simons Island. The Massachusetts 54th, the U.S.C.T. regiment commanded
by 25-year-old Col. Robert Gold Shaw, fought against Sherman's armies who looted
and burned the town of Darien, located on a channel of the Altamaha River near
Savannah, in 1863. The battle was made famous by the movie Glory.

In the years following the Civil War, a number of barrier islands were taken
over by squatters and plunderers, which infested the South during Reconstruction.
Federal forces had previously pillaged coastal island plantations until they
became inoperable and owners fled. Some of the former plantation slaves who
remained farmed for subsistence, but before long owners returned. Loosely organized
sharecropping and land-bartering arrangements were made between the two. Attempts,
however, to reestablish antebellum cotton plantations failed under these working
conditions. Plantations simply could not operate without enforced labor; the
work required was that treacherous, as the former slaves knew all too well.
The plantation era came to a close.

But before the war's end, the present state of Sapelo Island's cultural history
began to take shape. The remaining Spaldings on Sapelo, two daughters-in-law
of the late Thomas, undertook the task of sailing slaves to the mainland. Upon
arrival, they marched them over 160 miles to the interior of the state. Those
too young or too old to walk were left behind to fend for themselves.

Once freed, many former slaves from Sapelo struggled their way back to the
coast, then back to the island (many to reunite with family). An order by Sherman
granted abandoned land on the coastal islands and a section of the Georgia mainland
in 40-acre allotments to the freed people. Those returning to Sapelo set to
work at once, cultivating soil and building a schoolhouse and church. A community
began to emerge. But this autonomy did not last long as power shifted from Sherman's
General Saxton to a General Tillson.

By 1871 three Sapelo men scraped together a down payment on 1,000 acres at
Raccoon Bluff, which they divided into 33-acre plots and sold to former Spalding
slaves. Although it was not a prosperous community, as people subsisted on what
they could grow and fish, Raccoon Bluff became Sapelo's dominant community by
the end of the nineteenth century.

In 1911 the last of the Spaldings sold the greater part of the island to Howard
Coffin of the Hudson Motor Company, and in 1934 Coffin sold it to tobacco heir
R.J. Reynolds. By 1950, Reynolds had set aside the northern half of Sapelo Island
for a game preserve, but Raccoon Bluff stood in his way. Because Reynolds held
economic power over the black community, the Sapelo people moved, although reluctantly,
to parcels in Hog Hammock.

After Reynolds' death in 1963, the northern half of the island was sold to
the state. A few years later, Georgia bought the rest, except for Hog Hammock.
Today, approximately 70 people-many descendants of the legendary slave, Bulallah-reside
in the Hog Hammock community. Geechee, their West Africa-influenced dialect
(known as Gullah along the South Carolina coast), is still spoken by some. Many
Hog Hammock residents have committed themselves to the preservation of their
community, keeping traditions such as southern-style cooking and storytelling
alive.

Lumbering

One resource, still abundant on the coastal mainland and on some of the islands,
was lumber. From 1870 to 1900, the short-lived lumber period occurred in response
to an increasing international demand for southern lumber. St. Simons and Doboy
Island, a tiny marsh island south of Sapelo, became the sites of lumber mills
because of their river locations. Cypress, pine, cedar, and oak were cut from
flourishing mainland forests; the logs were then floated down the Altamaha and
Satilla rivers to island mills where they were sawed into lumber for export.
St. Simons and Doboy sounds were stocked with great schooners from all parts
of the world waiting to purchase the lumber. Simultaneously, residents of Sapelo
Island made a thriving business raising cattle and selling beef to the captains
and crews of the schooners. This bustling period rapidly ended as the trees
suitable for lumber were depleted.

During this period following the Civil War, barrier islands such as St. Catherines
and Ossabaw seemed to evolve full circle. With fields overgrown enough to provide
cover for birds and game, they appeared as they had centuries ago as the roaming
and hunting grounds of the Creek Indians.

Wintering Millionaires, Budding Tourism, And Conservation

Of the barrier islands in the latter part of the nineteenth century, Vanstory
wrote lyrically, "Devastated and deserted and weary with war the islands
dozed in the sun; time healed their wounds, and nature covered their scars with
the lush green of vine and fern and the profligate beauty of the tropical flower."
The Georgia coast attracted vacationers and naturalists alike who were bedazzled
by nature. At the dawn of the twentieth century, the barrier islands entered
a new period of prosperity and five of the islands became the property of America's
wealthiest tycoons.

Between 1886 and 1942, American millionaires faithfully wintered on Jekyll
Island. Astors, Rockefellers, Morgans, Vanderbilts, Macys, Pulitzers, and Goodyears
took leave of Fifth Avenue penthouses and retreated to the serenity of the Georgia
coast. For 56 years Jekyll remained their exclusive playground; visitors were
referred to as strangers and allowed to stay on the island for two weeks only.
The "simple life" that these leading American financiers chose to
lead on Jekyll often included wild-boar hunting parties followed by 10-course
meals prepared by a chef imported from New York City's Delmonico's Restaurant.
Residing in multiroomed "cottages," the rich and famous played golf
and tennis and socialized.

St. Catherines Island, purchased in 1876 by John J. Rauers of Savannah, became
home to one of the finest country homes and private game reserves in the nation.
The home of a signer of the Declaration of Independence, Button Gwinnett, remains
on St. Catherines.

Once
the Torrey family settled into their home on Ossabaw after acquiring the island
in 1924, the hospitality of plantation days was restored. An oversized leather-bound
guest book, first signed by the Henry Ford family, boasted many a well-known
name with the passage of very little time.

During World War II, the famous millionaires of Jekyll departed for the last
time. In 1947, the State of Georgia purchased the island for the bargain price
of $675,000. Since then the number of private houses built in residential areas
has dramatically increased. Closer to the beach are tourist developments such
as motels, restaurants, a convention center, an aquarium, and shopping centers.
A public fishing pier and an amphitheater for summer play were also built with
vacationers in mind.

Continuous development of subdivisions and shopping centers bring more permanent
residents and traffic to the narrow, tree-lined roads on St. Simons each year.
On the more exclusive Sea Island, the famed Cloister resort is still rated among
the finer hotels in the nation and continues to attract international clientele.
These islands also attracted the attention of famous writers, such as Eugene
O'Neill, who wrote Ah Wilderness here, and Eugenia Price, the best-selling
author of a trilogy of books set on St. Simons.

On other barrier islands, the state and federal government have taken control
of the conservation of coastal terrain. In 1969 the tiny island of Wassaw was
sold to The Nature Conservancy provided that no bridge ever be built connecting
it to the mainland. Deeded to the federal government that same year, it is now
preserved as a national wildlife refuge. Virgin forests cover ancient dunes
and help to protect and increase island wildlife, and today Wassaw is a popular
hunting destination. The 5,600 acres of woodlands, lakes, and marsh on Blackbeard
Island also remain as an unspoiled natural haven, and Blackbeard is one of the
seven coastal refuges administered by the U.S. Department of Interior Fish and
Wildlife Service.

Ossabaw is also bridgeless and destined to stay that way. In 1961 the island's
private owner, Eleanor Torrey West, created the Ossabaw Island Project Foundation
for "men and women of creative thought and purpose." The foundation
soon gained a reputation as a high-quality, if slightly eccentric organization.
Lengthy waiting lists for admission to the select group were comprised of artists,
craftsmen, scientists, philosophers, photographers, poets, and writers. Each
paid a reasonable weekly fee to work in the idyllic setting. The author Ralph
Ellison and composer Aaron Copland were among the better-known residents. The
Georgia Department of Natural Resources now operates the island, and only those
who obtain special permission from the agency can visit Ossabaw.

Cumberland Island has remained largely wild. In the early 1970s, the federal
government established the Cumberland Island National Seashore and opened part
of this national treasure to the public. Visitation to St. Catherines, on the
contrary, has become extremely limited. In 1974, the island entered what must
have been the most unusual period in its varied history when it became one of
the New York Zoological Society's Rare Animal Survival Centers. Acres that were
once white fields of Sea Island cotton, then pastures for herds of black angus
cattle, became grazing areas for exotic animals from such far-away places as
Uganda, the Sudan, Kenya, the Sahara, and South America. In addition to the
work of the animal survival center, a number of archaeological explorations
have been undertaken on St. Catherines, such as those headed by Dr. David Thomas
as part of his Santa Catalina de Guale excavations. Guest visitation today is
quite difficult to obtain.

Two islands, Tybee and Skidaway, are accessible by the causeway off the coast
of Savannah. Tybee opens its 5-mile beach to the public, but Skidaway is a private
residential area with golf courses and recreation area developments. The University
of Georgia Marine Research Extension Service, located on Skidaway, offers some
research trips.